Las Vegas Review-Journal

Immigratio­n backlash after Georgia death

- By Greg Bluestein

ATHENS — Georgia Republican­s are expected to pursue a slate of measures targeting illegal immigratio­n after a suspect who officials say was in the U.S. illegally was charged with the murder of a student on the University of Georgia’s campus.

Senior Republican­s are considerin­g several still-evolving proposals, such as more stringent requiremen­ts that local government­s cooperate with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s and stiffer penalties for illegal immigrants convicted of crimes.

The election-year push for new crackdowns comes after the death of nursing student Laken Riley, who was found dead at a wooded trail on campus hours after she went for a run.

The suspect charged with her death, Jose Antonio Ibarra, is a Venezuela native who authoritie­s say entered the U.S. illegally in 2022 and was previously arrested in New York. His brother has also been charged with having a fake green card.

House Speaker Jon Burns, Senate President Pro Tem John Kennedy and other legislativ­e leaders have indicated they will back new immigratio­n-related measures in response to Riley’s killing. They’ll face a tight deadline with just weeks to go in the 2024 legislativ­e session.

Gov. Brian Kemp, who addressed an Athens business group early Monday, is said to be receptive to state-level immigratio­n measures, though he told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on he wouldn’t comment on specific proposals.

Instead, he has ratcheted up calls for President Joe Biden to shut down the U.S. border with Mexico and take other steps to deter uncontroll­ed migration. Earlier this month, he outlined plans to deploy more Georgia National Guard troops to Texas to patrol the border.

Democrats have accused Republican­s of seeking to score political points in an election year. And some party figures slammed congressio­nal GOP leaders for refusing to adopt a bipartisan Senate deal that would have made it harder for migrants to apply for asylum once they’ve entered the country illegally.

They say likely Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump pushed to kill the deal to ensure border problems remain a frontand-center issue in the race against Biden.

“If Republican­s truly cared about border issues, they’d have passed recent bipartisan immigratio­n reform instead of pandering to Trump,” said state Sen. Nikki Merritt, D-gwinnett. “The hypocrisy is unreal.”

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